The discussion in this thread has also included bot and crimeware
netblocks..
As for the 'good enough spam filter' versus giving spammers and botmasters
an unlimited supply of IP space, it starts to remind me of those high
school maths problems where a burette empties out a tank while a firehose
fills it up
People with good enough spam filters to run mail for millions of users each
will tell you much the same thing
--srs (htc one x)
On 28-Jun-2013 3:09 PM, "Jørgen Hovland" <jorgen at hovland.cx> wrote:
> Den 6/28/13 10:50 AM, skrev Frank Gadegast:
>>> Sascha Luck wrote:
>>>>> On Fri, Jun 28, 2013 at 09:47:35AM +0200, Frank Gadegast wrote:
>>>>>>> What about a RIR regulation to ensure that address space is only
>>>> used for purposes not harming anybody ?
>>>> That resource holders are responsible for the abuse coming
>>>> out of their networks ?
>>>>>>>>>> Srsly? Abandon the common-carrier principle for the sake of a minor
>>> annoyance like *spam*? Forcing ISPs to censor and surveil all traffic
>>>>>>> Sure, its a matter we should discuss, how far we like
>> to push things.
>>>> I find it disturbing that anyone would even consider regulating IP
> allocations based on abuse just because they don't have a good enough
> spamfilter themselves. I would rather see a regulation that would deny
> address space allocation to LIRs not having a good spamfilter.
>>>>> For a start I would like to force resource holders to actually
>> read the mail arriving under their abuse address.
>> This will not force anybody to control all the traffic.
>>>>> Do you believe this is practically possible for any huge email provider
> (or other services) ?
>>> F.e. by returning ticket numbers or the like.
>> Or sending automatic CCs to the RIPE NCC ..
>> This could be controlled, weighted and analyzed by the NCC
>> and could give evidence about how the ISP is working
>> with abuse reports.
>>>>> Or even better; RIPE NCC could just get a login to PRISM and read all your
> mail there.
>>> > Others have probably other ideas, lets hear and discuss them.
>>> Accepting your abuse mail is not a right, but a service. This may be
> unfortunate, but it should be up to each LIR to decide if and through what
> media they accept complaints. Creating a standard and encourage all LIRs to
> use it would however be great.
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